"We all owe a debt of gratitude to Scott Kurashige for assembling these truths about our history. Our failure to face the truth of anti-Asian racism is part of what renders us unsafe and our democracy vulnerable. At the same time, facing this history will help unlock the opportunity—for all of us—that lies in our multiracial future."—Ai-jen Poo, cohost with Alicia Garza of the Sunstorm podcast and President of the National Domestic Workers Alliance
"Asian Americans face a two-headed monster when enduring anti-Asian violence: the act itself, and the erasure caused when we are told the act was not racially motivated. Kurashige has done the vital work of placing all of this into a historical framework, backed by the wisdom of a community servant. This book is blood, guts, sweat, and tears. Our bodies. Our minds. Our refusal to be erased. In short, this history, this erasure, and this fight against it all is as much a part of American history as anything else. Good god, I need this book to exist. I hope the rest of the world feels that way about it too."—Bao Phi, poetry slam champion, published poet (Sông I Sing, Thousand Star Hotel), and children's book author (A Different Pond, My Footprints)
"While the Covid-19 lockdown era saw a surge in xenophobic hostility, harassment, and physical attacks on Asians in the United States, anti-Asian sentiment—and the violence that all too often springs up in its wake—is neither new nor fleeting. As Kurashige shows in this urgent and necessary book, it's a shockingly regular response by nativist Americans toward any internal or external perceived threat, from trade competition to supply chain breakdowns; loss of jobs to excessive foreign investment; rising crime, falling birthrates, inflation, recession, and, of course, both cold and hot war. Kurashige's career and bold advocacy make him the ideal voice to tell this story. American Peril will become a mainstay in classrooms and libraries, and on the shelves and nightstands of any who want to understand the pernicious role that white supremacy has played in shaping what it means to be American: carving off, cutting out, excluding and sometimes executing those who it judges do not belong in this nation."—Jeff Yang, author of The Golden Screen and coauthor of New York Times bestseller Rise: A Pop History of Asian America from the Nineties to Now